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Yes, this week, tech bloggers discovered baby crying detector hidden in the S5 accessibility menu. Apparently, the feature uses the smartphone microphones to detect your baby cry, sending a vibrating alert to your paired Galaxy Gear smartwatch. The menu says the feature works best when the phone is placed one meter from said baby, ideally in a room with no background noise. Because what baby wants to sleep next to a jackhammer, but also errant sounds could screw up your smartphone-turned-baby-monitor cry recogniti
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stanley cup tp://gizmodo/galaxy-gear-smartwatch-review-potential-miles-from-re-1431208144/all Aside from this feature reliance on a frustrating, half-baked smartwatch, it seems to miss the whole point of baby monitors: You use them when you want to go in the other room and play with your smartphone! Also, I sure hope you don ;t get any texts or phone calls while your Galaxy S5 is serving as babysitter. Naptime will be so over. [SoyaCincau via UberGizmo] Image of crying baby: Shutterstock / tommaso lizzul
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Astrobiologist Jack O ;Malley-James at the University of St. Andrews in Fife, Scotland and his colleagues are concerned about what habitable planets might look like in their old age. Furthermore, his team also wants to know how long we can expect to detect life on such a planet over the course of its habitable lifetime. To find the answers, O ;Malley-James ran some computer models of various climates and biospheres of possible exoplanets, including those approximately 2.8 billion years older than Earth. As their research notes, the diversity of life and population sizes would be significantly reduced during a planet end-stage. The death of a planet biosphere would comm
stanley cup becher ence with planets dying off, followed by rising temperatures and subsequent wearing away of silicon-loaded rocks known as silicates 鈥?an effect that would increase their absorption of carbon dioxide. The next phase would be the extinction of all animals, from large vertebrates right down to the small ones; invertebrates would be the last to go. Fascinatingly, a habitable planet will experience a conclusion similar to its beginning, one crawling in microscopic organisms. Writing in Astrobiology Magazine, Charles Q. Choi explains how these changes might influence a planet detectab
stanley termos ility: The scientists calculated the extinction of higher plants would lower atmospheric oxygen and ozone levels to concentrations und
stanley cup etectable by astronomers by about 1.11 billion years from now. Still,